Thank you, Ion and good morning, everyone. Please turn to Slide 3. Overall, I was very pleased with our team's execution during the third quarter. It's typically the most challenging period of the year for our operations and 2023 was no different. Although part shortages and vessel delays continued to plague us, sales for the quarter were $521 million and our adjusted EBITDA was $33 million or 6.4% of sales. Non-new machine sales increased 21% year-over-year to $155 million. Please turn to Slide 4. Manitowoc continues to transition from a product-driven company to a services-oriented business. I'd like to highlight a few wins during the third quarter that demonstrate the changing business model under our Cranes+50 strategy. To start, we recently won an order for Maxim Crane Works, the largest crane rental house in North America, to rebuild 14 Manitowoc 2250 crawler cranes. The first 2 cranes arrived at our facilities in September. This multiyear project brings real value to this important customer by lengthening the productive life of their assets. The key to winning this work was the close collaboration between our MGX and Manitowoc aftermarket teams to align the cost and pricing of parts and labor for an acceptable end-to-end margin to meet the customers' expectations. This is an excellent example of the synergies we continue to realize from our acquisitions. A big thank you to our teams leading the project and to Maxim for their business. On the back of this win, we recently expanded our MGX footprint with a new branch in South Carolina. In addition to providing more capacity for remanufacturing work, this location will represent our Potain and National Crane boom truck product families. This new facility brings our combined MGX and Aspen footprint to 18 branch locations. Next, in Latin America, we opened a new facility in Lima, Peru. This branch will serve Peru's growing mining industry with local parts warehouse for faster delivery combined with a team of service technicians. Including this new facility, Manitowoc now has 5 locations throughout Latin America. Moving to the other side of the world. Year-to-date, we've delivered 22 used tower cranes to Turkey, Azerbaijan and Georgia. Since the humanitarian crisis unfolded in Turkey after the February earthquake, Carina El Rkaiby, Regional Sales Manager, has worked hard to support the expedited reconstruction efforts in the region. Carina has set a great example of cross-regional leadership, locating several used cranes from Asia to help meet the short lead time demand in Turkey. As the saying goes, when life hands you lemons, you make lemonade. The crisis in Ukraine forced a complicated exit from our Russian business in 2022. We enjoyed a leading market position there for many years and had some very talented, long-tenured team members. At the time, we took a leap of faith and relocated several of our key team members from Russia to the Dubai location. We didn't need the extra staff but we wanted to retain as many people as possible. Sales Manager Sergey Neznamov was one of those team members. Since his move to Dubai, he has reinvigorated our business activity in several CIS countries and Georgia by executing our Cranes+50 strategy and introducing used tower crane sales. Whether addressing lead time issues or finding the right crane for the project, our team in the Middle East has done a great job of using all of their resources to serve our customers. Well done Carina and Sergey. Cranes+50 is taking hold in every corner of Manitowoc. After 120 years as a product company, I'm extremely proud of how our team is making the transition to become services-oriented business. Please turn to Slide 5. If Cranes+50 is our engine for growth, The Manitowoc Way is our fuel. As I mentioned in recent quarters, demand for tower cranes is softening in Europe and overall business in the Middle East is booming. At our Niella, Italy factory, we manufacture self-erecting tower cranes and rough terrain mobile cranes. During the third quarter, we expanded our rough terrain manufacturing footprint in Niella to help us serve the growing Middle East market. We use lean techniques throughout this process and redeployed our operations team members to optimize the production of mobile cranes while mitigating the impact of the tower crane market decline on our local workforce. Led by Diego Marabotto, the transformation was completed in August during the summer shutdown. I'd like to congratulate his group on great teamwork. Last month, during my visit to Wilhelmshaven, Germany facility, I had the opportunity to see how the team increased our capacity on the boom paint line by 70%. With a little capital, a little creativity and some elbow grease, the team separated the return line to make Shuttlelift [ph] and paint 2 distinct lines. They improved the unloading of parts, renewed the control system and implemented an ultra-solid paint formula for our gray tele-cylinders. A year ago, this was our number one bottleneck in the factory. Not anymore. [Foreign Language] to the Wilhelmshaven team. Please move to Slide 6. Turning to my market update. The positive trend in the United States continued during the third quarter. A few key dealers placed initial orders for 2024 to guarantee their build slots. Rental rates are holding up and utilization remains high at crane rental houses. Finally, dealer inventories remain at sufficient levels to support the current retail pull-through. Similar to last quarter, we remain cautious in the short term about the U.S. market. We still have a lot of cranes to deliver to our dealers before year-end which could lead to excess inventory in the channel if the economy pulls back. Nevertheless, we maintain a positive long-term outlook on the U.S. market. At this point, we're still waiting for the infrastructure and CHIPS bill to come to fruition. Europe, however, remains a different story. As previously discussed, inflation and the subsequent increases in interest rates has significantly curbed activity in the residential construction market which has negatively impacted tower crane demand. Tower crane machine orders for the quarter were down 55% year-over-year. Please move to Slide 7. As of August, housing permits were down 37% in France and 34% in Germany year-over-year. I recently visited several French dealers and customers and their sentiment confirmed the market statistics. Utilization is down, rental rates have dropped and everyone is waiting for the government to intervene. At the moment, rental math is upside down. It's tough for a rental house to justify growing their rental fleet when rental rates are declining and interest rates and crane prices have risen. The majority of the demand that we see is from customers that are proactively managing their long-term fleet renewal strategy. Many fleets on average, are over 15 years old and the owners cannot afford to let their fleets age much longer. I expect this environment to continue into 2024. Please move to Slide 8. Fortunately, the European mobile cranes business is not impacted by the soft residential construction market as tower cranes. Although there are plenty of headwinds in the mobile cranes market, the impact varies throughout Europe. Germany, the single largest all-terrain market in the EU has slowed and the Scandinavian countries are being adversely impacted by FX. In addition, France and Benelux showed their first signs of weakness in the quarter. Demand in the U.K., Italy and Iberia continue to hold up. As I stated last quarter, our efforts to improve quality, grow our service and launch new products will help buoy our business. The upcoming launch of 2 new four-axle all-terrain cranes will help us maintain our momentum. In the Middle East, in contrast to Europe, demand continues to grow at a rapid pace. Our orders increased 57% year-over-year during the quarter. Saudi Arabia's sweeping efforts to modernize have lifted the entire region. Lastly, the Asia Pacific market remained mixed but slow overall. China remains very soft and the sentiment is starting to spread outside of the country. Moreover, the purchasing behaviors for cranes in the region are pretty similar to those in Europe. Generally speaking, tower cranes are clearly in a down cycle, while mobile cranes appear to be holding up. On the positive side, the Indian market continues to be strong. In South Korea, there has been some progress, mainly with mobile cranes and the Samsung's next big project is moving forward which is good news for the tower crane business. And finally, Australia remains a bright spot. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brian.